In the 10 weeks since the NBA draft, we have not had all that much opportunity to watch Jazz guard Dante Exum — who was chosen with the fourth pick that day — in action. He played in five Summer League games in Las Vegas this summer and, now, five more games with the Australian national team at the FIBA World Cup.

What have we learned?

Dante Exum (Getty Images)

“Not much,” said an Eastern Conference scouting director, laughing. “He’s not ready for the NBA, that is for sure. But a lot of guys are not ready for the NBA and they have got to learn on the fly. He is no different. But he is not going to jump into the league and all of a sudden average 20 points a game. There’s just no way.”

During the Vegas summer league, Exum averaged 7.2 points and 2.8 assists in 26.6 minutes per game. He shot a measly 30.8 percent from the field.

In the FIBA World Cup, it has been much of the same, with Exum getting limited minutes for an Australian team that was able to move out of the group phase. Exum has averaged 3.2 points and 2.4 assists, shooting just 35.7 percent from the field and 25.0 percent from the 3-point line.

He played 11 and 13 minutes in Australia’s first two games, but essentially fell out of the rotation in games against Lithuania and Mexico. For Australia’s meaningless loss to Angola, Exum did play 31 minutes, finishing with 12 points and six assists.

The positives with Exum are obvious — he has a true point guard’s mentality and talent, which should translate nicely once he gets consistent NBA playing time.

“He is really, really good in the pick-and-roll,” the scouting director said. “He knows how to take the pick and emerge with his head up and he sees the whole floor. He will get better with his decision-making as time goes on and he gets experience, but that ability to come off the pick like that, you know being able to see and process everything immediately with your head up, that is something you can’t teach.”

Of course, the long-term problem for Utah is that the Jazz drafted Exum hoping to play him at shooting guard alongside Trey Burke, their first pick two years ago. That could be a tough fit, especially with the future of Exum’s perimeter shot still very much uncertain.

“From what I have seen, the guy is a 1 all the way,” the scouting director said. “You can try putting him at 2, but his shot is just not something you fear right now — he needs to adjust his mechanics and he needs more confidence in it. If he plays a lot of 2-guard, I would hope it does not hurt his confidence and set him back a little. That’s not his game right now.”